Childlike Empress
Banned
I thought Ron Paul was just stubborn to not officially resign from his candidacy, but it turns out he actually has a strategy:
Politico goes into more details: A Ron Paul Revolution is brewing
His supporters seem to be confident that if they continue with their grass-roots successes in the upcoming big states conventions, they have a realistic chance to "beat the system" through the back-door and nominate Paul.
According to their "real" delegate count, right now it stands 342 Romney : 109 Paul
Bizarre.
Washington Post said:[...] The idea behind Paul’s “delegate strategy” is to exploit the difference between what the GOP nominating process looks like and what it really is. What it looks like is a rolling series of miniature election days, with attack ads, flag-waving rallies and statewide votes.
It really is an eye-glazing, posterior-numbing series of meetings.
These usually happen after the votes: Local conventions elect delegates to state conventions. State conventions elect delegates to the national convention. Then, in Tampa in August, national delegates will cast the votes that choose the nominee.
In nine states, the first step determines the later ones: All delegates are “bound” to vote for whomever the voters chose. But in the other states, delegates are split between candidates. Or they are allowed to ignore the voters and choose for themselves.
For Paul, that means a battle lost at the polls can be refought in a hotel ballroom. [...]
Politico goes into more details: A Ron Paul Revolution is brewing
Politico said:[...] if for some reason Romney doesn’t get 1,144 delegate votes at the national convention — or 50 percent — another round of balloting is held and all of the delegates are free to vote for whoever they please. [...]
RNC rules clearly say a delegate can abstain from the vote. Wouldn’t that set Paul loyalists free from voting for Romney? Well, probably not. In practice, when a majority of delegates decide they are going to abstain from the nominating vote, that state’s delegation is skipped over in the roll call.
Putnam said the rules aren’t clear what happens after all of the states vote and the skipped states get a second shot at it. If they abstain again, it could create an endless “feedback loop where the convention gets stuck.” [...]
His supporters seem to be confident that if they continue with their grass-roots successes in the upcoming big states conventions, they have a realistic chance to "beat the system" through the back-door and nominate Paul.
According to their "real" delegate count, right now it stands 342 Romney : 109 Paul
Bizarre.